Game For Love: Game for You (Kindle Worlds Novella) Read online




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  This work was made possible by a special license through the Kindle Worlds publishing program and has not necessarily been reviewed by Nyree Belleville, Oak Press, LLC. All characters, scenes, events, plots and related elements of Game For Love remain the exclusive copyrighted and/or trademarked property of Nyree Belleville, Oak Press, LLC, or their affiliates or licensors.

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  GAME FOR YOU

  By Jami Davenport

  Summary

  Is there life after football?

  One hard hit too many has forced Branson Bullock into early retirement. His future looks bleak, and he's struggling with what's next, since he's never planned for a life off the field.

  Sarah Largo escaped an abusive relationship and has reinvented herself with plenty of hard work and an attitude makeover. As Branson's housekeeper, she keeps his home spotless, plans his parties, and cooks his meals, but her bad case of hero-worship for the former football star is Sarah's delicious little secret.

  Tired of moping around his house, Branson impulsively invites Sarah to dinner, never expecting the sparks that flare between them. Intrigued, he pursues Sarah with all the strategy and determination he ever put to use on the football field, but hero-worship aside, Sarah is still struggling with confidence issues and worries she isn’t worthy of a good man’s love.

  Have their pasts broken them beyond repair, or is a new life—together—just beginning?

  Acknowledgments

  I’d like to thank Bella Andre for this opportunity to play in her world. I’ve loved her books since the first one was published. She’s been an inspiration as I start my self-publishing career with her invaluable advice she shares willingly with the romance author community.

  Thank you also to Laurie Ryan, Chassily Wakefield, and Delia Brendan who dropped what they were doing to come to my rescue at the last minute when I needed help with the editing, cover, and blurb of Game for You.

  Table of Contents

  Summary

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Epilogue

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  COMPLETE BOOKLIST

  Chapter 1

  Branson Bullock’s life as he knew it was over. Fucking over. Done. The clock had run out, and he’d lost the final game. He’d played through various injuries over the years, but he couldn’t play through this. This was his head, and the League took that kind of stuff seriously with all the crap being discovered about head injuries and the legal ramifications.

  He’d gotten three separate opinions, and every doctor agreed. Damn them. Too dangerous to risk one more hit. You’ve already taken too many risks and played beyond what was considered safe.

  Well, screw safe. Branson had never once in his life played safe, and now they were forcing him out. His hall-of-fame career couldn’t end after one hard hit in training camp over a week ago. It just couldn’t.

  But it had.

  The San Francisco Outlaws, the team he’d played for all eight years of his professional career approached him late last week with plans for a big retirement party and to honor him at the first home game. He’d flipped them off and stomped out of the practice facility. That afternoon, they cut him. Fine, he didn’t need them. His agent’s phone would ring off the hook.

  It didn’t.

  He entered free agency, and not one team showed interest, not after the reports of his latest concussion. And now his last hope, that third doctor, drove a final nail in his gridiron coffin.

  He was supposed to go out in a blaze of glory, catching his last football in the end zone during a championship game, not be taken out by a rookie free agent in a training camp scrimmage.

  Stuff like this shouldn’t happen to him. He’d paid his dues, earned his stripes, and done everything the right way.

  But now he was a month short of turning thirty, and he had no future. Only a past. No plans. No career. No aspirations. Nothing. Not a damn thing.

  Sure, he had money and plenty of it. He’d been mighty careful to stockpile his millions and invest wisely. No way would he be one of those players who was broke within a few years of retirement. He hadn’t clawed his way out of poverty to be shoved into that black hole again.

  Money wasn’t an issue. Life without football was.

  He’d dedicated twenty-nine years of his life to football, foregone a steady girlfriend, a wife, a family of his own. Everything in his life had revolved around football. But now it couldn’t.

  Branson slumped down on the veranda of his waterfront view home, wishing for dark storm clouds or thick, hazy fog to match his mood. Instead, bright sunshine streaked the water with cheerful bursts of light, as if mocking him.

  He heard his housekeeper, Sarah, bustling about the living room, cleaning and vacuuming. He wished she’d finish and leave him to wallow in his misery. Those pitying glances she’d cast his way all morning pissed him off. He hated being the object of anyone’s pity and she didn’t deserve his anger, so he’d escaped outside with his bad attitude and a carafe of coffee rather than take his frustrations out on an innocent bystander.

  “Mr. Bullock, I made you some lunch.” Sarah stood in the doorway, usually a slight, nervous little thing. She used to remind him of a fairy or a lost waif or something equally small and fragile. She’d always been skittish, and he tamped down his temper so he wouldn’t scare the heck out of her.

  Only today, she regarded him with a steady gaze, friendly yet firm, and only a hint of her former shyness.

  “It’s Branson,” he said wearily, repeating the words he’d uttered a hundred times over the past three years she’d worked for him.

  “Sorry.” Nodding, she placed a grilled-cheese sandwich and bowl of thick, rich soup in front of him.

  Even in his crappy mood, the delectable smell of one of her signature soups wafted to his nostrils, reminding him that he was damn hungry, not having eaten since yesterday at lunch when he’d gotten the final results from that last doctor and talked to his agent.

  Sarah turned to walk back inside. He put out a hand to stop her, and she cringed and pulled away, staring at him with frightened eyes, reverting back to the old Sarah. Branson frowned, temporarily forgetting about himself and focusing on her, and what little he knew about her, other than she was close to him in age and came highly recommended by a former teammate. She stayed in the background and out of his way. Never said much. And he never asked much. At least not anything personal. He understood her need for privacy. He was a private person himself.

  She’d been one of the constants in his life which he took for granted. Like football had been.

  But now he noticed little things, now that he was looking. He ran his gaze down her cute little body and up again to her face. She wore no makeup that he could discern. Funny that he’d never noticed before how pretty she was, or how nicely her simple cotton shirt shaped itself around a pair of mouth-watering breasts, or how her tan pants hugged her fine, rounded ass. Or those eyes. She had beautiful, expressive brown eyes, like a scared doe about to bolt at any moment. Her pale skin shone like porcelain. He guessed most women would die for skin like that, and his fingers itched to touch her. That thought sat him back on his heels.

  What the hell?

  He stared harder, unable to stop himself.

  Lately, she’d been different. Not so skittish. There’d been subtle changes in her, even if they didn’t register in his brain until now. He’d long suspected she’d bee
n involved in an abusive situation. He knew the signs all too well. Unfortunately. The long-sleeved shirts on hot days, the occasional black eye, an arm in a cast, moving as if she hurt, and the fear in her eyes. He’d even approached her about it on more than one occasion, offered to help if she needed it. Of course, every time, she flat out denied any problem. And he’d let it go at that.

  Then, months ago, she started wearing short sleeves and the bruises on her arms faded to nothing. He hoped like hell she’d gotten rid of the bastard who’d done that crap to her. Branson’s fingers curled into fists at the thought of a man beating on a little thing like this. He’d like to give the jerk a taste of how it felt to fight a real man, not a woman half his size.

  Sarah cleared her throat, startling him. “I’m sorry you were cut. I’ll miss watching you play.”

  “You’ve watched me play?” He frowned up at her. She’d never once mentioned being a football fan. How had he not known that one simple fact about her after three years?

  She nodded, her eyes lighting up for a moment. “I love football and the Outlaws are my team.”

  “I never knew.” Guilt sliced through him. He should’ve asked her, offered her tickets once in a while, but he’d been too busy playing the part of Superjock—best tight end in the league, some said the best tight end ever, too busy for the real people in his life. Lack of time wasn’t an issue now.

  “Now you do.” She met his gaze and started to look away, then she visibly straightened, and stared right back at him, displaying an inner strength he’d never seen before, and he secretly applauded her for it. In fact, he glanced away first. Staring into her deep brown eyes with their hint of sadness and pain did strange things to him, things he’d not allowed himself to feel when football had been his only mistress.

  “Join me for lunch, Sarah.” His words shocked him and obviously shocked her. He reached out and gently tugged on her hand. This time when he touched her, she didn’t flinch. He didn’t want her to leave. Something about her appealed to him, perhaps it was a hidden, mutual pain, and their struggle to rise above it. Perhaps it was something more primal. He definitely noticed her female assets.

  Sarah stared down at the big hand engulfing hers, and he quickly released it. “Sorry,” he mumbled. He seemed to be saying that a lot lately.

  “I can’t. It’s not right.” She made a move to leave again, but he held her in place with one stern look.

  “Please, I’d love some company.” He forced himself not to plead with her, already only a few words away from down-grading his alpha status to a miserable, pussy-assed beta.

  Sarah hesitated, sucking her plump lower lip between her teeth. He stared at that lip and got hard. Instantly. Losing his career must be throwing him way off, as he’d never responded to her like that before, never noticed her body, never stared into her eyes, and definitely never groveled for her to dine with him.

  Perhaps today might be a good day to start.

  “Please,” he begged, half-desperate for her quiet, gentle companionship.

  She didn’t say a word, but escaped into the house.

  He sighed. Alone again.

  A few minutes later, she appeared with lunch of her own and sat in the chair opposite his without a word. He offered her a friendly smile. She smiled back, then ducked her head shyly, concentrating on her soup. Obviously, remnants of the old Sarah still existed, but her efforts to be brave struck a chord deep inside him. He was proud of her.

  Branson finished first and leaned back in his chair, feeling better than he’d felt in a while just because of her calm presence. He watched her finish a meal equivalent to his and wondered where she packed all that food on her little body. She smiled tentatively at him. God, when she smiled like that, she had to be the most adorable little lady in San Francisco.

  He sat back in his chair and stretched, leveling a gentle gaze in her direction. “So tell me, Sarah, what do you do when you leave here? Do you have a family?” Small talk, that’s all it was, yet he really wanted to know the more about her.

  Her smile dipped, and she regarded him with suspicion. “I—I live next door to my mother and help care for my sister’s younger kids while Mom works nights cleaning businesses.”

  “Oh, I see. Why doesn’t your sister take care of them?” Seemed like a safe question, but her frozen expression said it was anything but.

  “My mom has full custody.”

  Ah, okay. Branson tiptoed out of that mine field, seeking safer ground. “How many siblings do you have?”

  “I’m the oldest. I have two sisters.”

  “And one of them isn’t able to care for her kids?” There he went, bumbling right back into the danger zone. He had no idea why he was being so nosy.

  Her brown eyes clashed with his showing that inner strength again, even if she did have to work for it. She raised her head proudly. “She can’t. She’s in prison for murder. She robbed a convenience store with her boyfriend, and the clerk was killed.”

  “Oh. I’m sorry. It’s really none of my business. I shouldn’t have pushed.” He ran a hand through his shaggy hair, mentally reminding himself to get it trimmed. He’d been raised poor, but his single mother had been church-going and respectable, God rest her soul. He didn’t have siblings in jail. In fact, he didn’t have siblings at all. He hadn’t lived in a world like hers, but he could imagine it, as he had friends and teammates who dealt with gangs and violence on a daily basis.

  Sarah finished her breakfast and met his gaze. “I’m sorry about your injury. It must be hard to leave something you love before you’re ready to go.”

  Jesus, her sympathy almost undid him. “It is.” He admitted, forcing the words past the raw lump in his throat. “Damn hard. I’m still struggling with what’s next.” Why he chose to tell her this he didn’t have a freaking clue.

  “I’m really, really sorry.” She stacked the plates, bowls, and silverware and balanced them on the palm of one hand. As she skirted by him, she paused long enough to pat his arm and smile down at him, one of those smiles which seemed to say: Hang in there. I believe in you. You’ll do just fine.

  Her concern seemed so genuine that it filled in a bit of the hole in his heart and forever changed the way that he saw her.

  * * * *

  Sarah Largo admitted to harboring a teensy crush on her handsome employer. Okay, teensy might be a bit of an understatement. The man defined hot from his tall, muscled body to his deep blue eyes and strong hands, but he was oh, so much more than that. Usually too busy to pay much attention to her, he was always kind and appreciative, generous with holiday bonuses, and flexible with her schedule. He was the nicest man she’d ever met, though she admitted he didn’t have a tough act to follow.

  For the past three years, she’d lived in a fantasy world with Branson as its center. Imagining life with him had been the only thing propping her up through the bad times. As she’d cleaned his home, she’d dreamed of being the lady of the house rather than the employee, planning parties, cooking meals for his friends and relatives. Maybe a big Thanksgiving or Christmas dinner. When she decorated his Christmas tree every year, she’d imagined a little box hidden in the boughs of the tree, just for her. He’d pull it out, get on one knee and pledge his undying love.

  She’d written stories in her journal often with him as the hero and lived them in her dreams. But that’s all they’d been, the dreams of a woman in a nasty situation who needed an escape.

  Branson gave her that escape and more. She’d fallen in love with him the first time she’d met him when he’d treated her like an equal, nothing like the rich bitch she’d worked with previously. He’d been kind and concerned when he’d studied her last black eye with knowing eyes and offered to help her. She’d been humiliated and embarrassed, even while she secretly wanted to accept his assistance.

  He’d never know how just thinking of him pulled her through all the dark times. Now the dark time had descended upon Branson, and she’d do everything in her power to shi
ne some light into his darkness. She owed him that.

  The doorbell rang and snapped her out of her thoughts. She hustled to the door, while Branson shouted in the background. “I’m not home.”

  Sarah flung open the door. Cole Taylor, middle linebacker for the San Francisco Outlaws and Branson’s buddy, stood on the porch, one hand on the door frame and one leg cocked back in a casual pose.

  “Hey, Sarah. How ya doing? You ready to quit this job and come work for me yet?” Cole grinned at her.

  “Soon, I promise.” She smiled back, picking up the easy banter she rarely experienced with most men. But Cole didn’t have hidden agendas. He didn’t look at her with judgment in his gaze, but with friendly acceptance. Nothing more. His eyes never wandered from his sweet wife. Someday, Sarah would find a man who would love her like that.

  “The offer’s always open. So where’s the rat bastard? Licking his wounds like a pansy?” Even as Cole spoke the harsh words, she caught the flicker of concern in his dark eyes.

  Sarah hesitated. She’d heard Branson’s order loud and clear, but her days of being ordered around like a slave were over. Furthermore, the man could use a friend, whether he admitted it or not.

  She turned and pointed in the direction of the back veranda. “He’s out there.”

  Cole lowered his voice, genuinely concerned, all cockiness drained from his expression. “How’s he doing?”

  “Hard to tell, but I’m certain it’s hit him pretty hard.”

  “Yeah, I’m sure it has.” Cole smiled at her, a warm, friendly smile, reminding her that there were at least two good men left in this world. “I can’t even begin to imagine, and I have a loving wife and grandma to prop me up. He doesn’t have anyone.”

  “Not even a family member?”

  Cole raised one eyebrow. “Have you ever known any family to visit?”

  “No. Never.” The truth hit her like a slam to the chest. Branson stood alone in this world except for a few close friends. And now they’d ripped the sport he lived for from his big hands and left him with lots of questions and no answers.